Governor of Ekiti State, Ayo Fayose has officially cleared the air on the allegation that his government diverted the recent Paris Club loan refund he got to other means other than what it was meant for.

But Fayose who denied the allegationn and described those who made the allegations as frustrated liars, said: “I’m somebody that whenever I received allocation or any money from the FG. I usually invite all the workers’ leaders to a roundtable to discuss on how the money should be used in payment of salaries and emoluments and other things.Fayose

” I do this so that whenever my enemies spread any falsehood, I usually advise the people to ask the labour leaders in the state and local government area so they can explain to them and let them know that I usually carry them along on how we use the allocations here. I have nothing to hide. Money is good though, but even if we have the whole money in the world, it cannot return me as governor.

“The fact is that the Paris Club loan refund that came to the state was N8.8 billion out of which N5.4 belonged to the state government while N3.4 billion belonged to the local government.

“Out of our own N5.4 we signed an agreement with the Federal government that 50 percent of it would go to human capital development by way of gratuities, pensions and salaries etc all that could be described as renumeration for the labour force. 50 percent of our 5.4, which is N2.7billion, so we used that to settle one month arrears of every entitlements to public workers, civil servant pensioners subvented in our institutions. That is the truth of it.

” The remaining 50 percent is in the revenue consolidated account of the government to meet other financial obligations to other sectors of the economy. The staff renumeration and welfare is just one out of several sectors that the state government is financially responsible to.

” So, the issue of money being diverted to other things doesn’t arise here in Ekiti. We do the needful at all times. When we receive any money, we call a meeting of the stakeholders and decide on what to do. We table all our obligations to all sectors and then we prioritize our actions.‎

” You remember the election that gave me a second term, they were giving people money to vote for them, but the people collected their money and turned back to vote for me. That shows that the people want the good character in a governor.
We are not ungrateful people in Ekiti. Let them bring all their soldiers, police and all that, we will defeat them again.”

Explaining further, Chief Toyin Ojo, Honourable Commissioner for Finance of Ekiti State, said “we table all our obligations to all sectors and then we prioritize our actions.

Such obligations include security, police, army, contingency vote of Mr. Governor powering the street lights, maintaining the dams to supply water to all the nooks and crannies of the state, etc. Apart from these recurrent expenditure, we also have our capital expenditure. The combination of the budget is both capital and recurrent. In fact, the World Bank standard, 60 percent of the money should be spent on capital expenditure, but in our case, we have more on recurrent because of the high labour cost.

What we spend here is about 60 percent to recurrent and 40 percent to capital and we are adhering to it strictly.

We don’t joke with actualizing our budget.”
Ojo gave the breakdown of how the money was channeled for state use as, July MDAs salary: N1.4b, allowances of social welfare, N1.4, feeding and maintenance of special schools, Ido, N2.4 million, feeding and maintenance of special school, Ikoro, N855.6 million, July 2016 subvention: N722, 468, 038.83, June 2016 pension, N323, 463,439.79, all totaling up to N2,461, 845, 132..16

While the local government use of N3.4 billion were salary component: N2, 3977, 64762.75, capital component as; N1, 000,000,000, Christmas Bonus ; N85M, June Salary arrears, N961M, July salary arrears; N983M, April pension arrears: N961M, and June pension arrears as N296M.

Comrade Ade adesanmi, Ekiti State Chairman of the Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC), also cleared air on the contraversial Ekiti Paris loan refund, saying the critics only enjoy spreading falsehood in criticism.

The labour leader denied that no workers had received any N250 million alleged to have been shared to them by governor Fayose, said the allegation of the so called N250 had already been circulated by the opposition before they went to Ikogosi waterfalls for the training as a protest by some youths in the town had forced them to shift the date of the commencement of the training. He said each participant only got a sum of N10,000 for the three-day training for their transport allowance.

Speaking about the promotion which the government ‘s critics have described as a ruse, Adesanmi said: ”

If there was a government that didn’t promote workers due for promotion in 2012 and 2013 and we have another government that said all the backlog of promotions should be done at once, I think that kind of government should be commended rather than castigating government that it is a ruse.

” For those of us present in employment, once you take your promotion letter, there are usually two dates in it. The notional date and the financial effective date.

The financial effective date would probably take effect from the month hen you receive the letter. The notional effective day is when the promotion was supposed to have taken place. Take for example, those of the workers who were supposed to have been promoted since 2014, the notional effective date on their letter would read 2014 and financially effective from March, 2017. When government gives approval, it doesn’t translate to automatic letter of promotion, there are procedures to be followed. For the junior staff, it is just one step,

“About the bail out, there are about three of such that this government has got. The first one that was taken around early 2015, it was about 9.6 billion. The labour was duly informed and the money was judiciously used.

Although, not all the money that state government asked for that was given. That is why there are still issues yet to be resolved.

The second bail-out was the budget support and since this state government has been getting that, it has been assisting it in solving the issue of salary arrears. We, the labour leaders in the state are privy to all these. The third bail out is this issue of Paris Club loan refund. Initially, we hear on the social media that it was N84 billion.

Later it came to 43 and later it came to 14 on the social media. What the state actually got was N8.8 billion. The local government got N3.4 billion. The state got N5.4 billion. And the agreement the various states have with the FG was to use at least 50 percent of that money to offset backlog of salaries and pensions. And when you look at the 50 percent of 5.4, it is 2.7, while the wage bill at state level is N2.6 billion. So, that paris money was actually used to pay our July salary and when that was paid, it included every body, the subvented institutions and pensioners were paid, ” he said.